Sports: The Impact Of Concussions In Sports

1267 Words3 Pages

The increase in concussions have made athletes think differently about playing sports, and the impact that concussions have had on sports is changing the way the game is being played. In this paper I will talk about what is a concussion, what is a concussion, what are the symptoms of a concussion, how can you prevent concussions, the protective equipment you should wear, medical guidelines you should follow, which athletes are at greatest risk of a concussion, which sports are most dangerous, which athletes can have multiple concussions, how concussions changed precaution in sports, the evolution in equipment in sports and, new safety rules in sports. The brain is a soft and the body protects it by cushioning it in cerebrospinal fluid inside …show more content…

Concussions are mostly caused by contact with a person, a teammate, the ground or a piece of equipment or an object. Six players in the AFL retied this year because of concussions. Another disease is called chronic traumatic encephalopathy or CTE is caused by hits to the head like tackles in football. Over 60% concussions come from football. The guys with the ages 5-18 the 5 leading sports that have the most concussions are bicycling, football, basketball, playground activities and soccer. Every Superbowl the issue of head impacts is on many of our minds it is well known, some football players have a brain disease called tau that causes tissue damage and spreading clumps of protein that can kill and strangle brain cells. With all the concussion concerns he AFL was to broaden the criteria for players pay out for career ending injuries like concussions. In years 2001-2008 kids at ages 5-18 years old accounted for 2.4 million sports related emergencies with 6% of it was concussions that is 135,000 kids. Former NFL star Jeff Beukeboom says “Back in my day, you get hit in the head you bounce right back and it didn’t matter if you had a concussion, you just got up and kept playing”. He said he took about 5-6 concussions and like 10 other bangs to the head. If you play really hard and you have that mentality to win you don’t care if you brake your leg your staying in the game. Head injuries can end up bad, but the effects of head injuries must also be considered. Second Impact syndrome, a term coined in 1995, describes which a person gets a second head injury before the symptoms the first one have gone away. College football players that have had 3 or more concussions are 3.4 times more likely to get another concussion, more than people who have never had a concussion

Open Document